Has any administration in any country ever taken our cybersecurity so seriously? Has any government ever before made so many aggressive, unprecedented interventions in the private sector all in the name of protecting our computer systems and smartphones? To hear U.S. government officials justify this series of decisions, you might think they have no higher priority than our digital security—that they are willing to go to any lengths to ensure a vulnerable Chinese phone doesn’t fall into the wrong hands and leave us all in jeopardy.

And yet, even a cursory glance at this administration’s actions belies just how little they are doing to secure computer systems even as they pay near-constant lip service to that goal. For instance, Politico this week published yet another installment in the ongoing saga of President Trump’s refusal to take even basic security precautions for his smartphones. (He uses one for tweeting and one for calls.) For instance, according to the Politico report, Trump’s dedicated tweeting iPhone has gone months without being checked by security experts, unlike President Obama’s phones, which were assessed every 30 days. Politico’s administration source said that Trump thought that the inspections were “too inconvenient.”

The Trump administration’s stance on cybersecurity is, in fact, quite clear-cut when you look at these decisions. Smartphone security—even for the top government official in the country—is, simply put, not a priority. Ditto crafting comprehensive, careful cyber policy and protecting Americans from large-scale data breaches of their personal information.

In this administration, cybersecurity is not something to strive for—rather it is something to tout loudly each and every time it can be used to justify a controversial or foolish or anti-competitive decision. Cybersecurity concerns are the perfect foil for attacking the Chinese tech industry: These concerns are unassailable in their importance to national security, but they’re based entirely on an invisible body of evidence made up of classified intelligence that none of us can ever be told about.

The sheer hypocrisy of arguing that Huawei phones sold in the U.S. pose a risk to the cybersecurity of government employees or military personnel while the commander in chief himself openly walks around with an unsecured iPhone—one that may well have been assembled in China itself—is breathtaking. It’s a reminder that while cybersecurity risks are important and require serious attention and consideration, they can also be wielded as a weapon to excuse any number of policy decisions made for other reasons.

There are real cybersecurity problems right now in the United States government—including an absence of clear leadership on cyber policy in the White House, a woefully lax security regime for the president’s personal devices, and a complete lack of penalties for companies that fail to protect sensitive data collected about their customers. But of course, doing something about these things would be too “inconvenient” for Trump and his administration to bother.